Ohlendorf v. Rathje

230 Ill. App. 427, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 118
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 13, 1923
DocketGen. No. 7,061
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 230 Ill. App. 427 (Ohlendorf v. Rathje) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ohlendorf v. Rathje, 230 Ill. App. 427, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 118 (Ill. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Jones

delivered the opinion of the court.

This cause is brought before us to review a decree of the circuit court of Will county finding that the plaintiffs in error, who were bank directors of the Illinois State Bank of Crete, are liable for the losses of said bank amounting to more than $300,000, occasioned through the-thefts. embezzlements and dishonest conduct of the cashier. The decree also found that the plaintiffs in error were guilty of negligence in the performance of their respective duties as charged in the bill of complaint and that such negligence was the proximate cause of the losses. Thex master in chancery was directed to determine the several amounts due from plaintiffs in error according to their respective liabilities as found by the chancellor.

, The bank involved in this case was situated in the village of Crete in Will county about thirty miles south of Chicago. This village, has a population of less than .1,000. Not far distant from Crete are other villages whose population ranges from a few hundred to a few thousand. The City of Chicago Heights, with a population of about 20,000, is about four miles north of Crete. The bank was organized in 1908. The inhabitants of Crete were largely of Herman birth or descendants of Herman people. Many of them were retired farmers. The business of the village was similar to that ordinarily found in such a community. There had been a bank there some years previous. It had not been successful and was liquidated. The Hlinois State Bank of Crete was organized by a number of citizens of Crete largely upon the initiative of Henry Schweer, a retail shoe merchant, who had theretofore been engaged in a small way in buying and selling real estate mortgages and in safe keeping-funds for some of his friends and acquaintances. He interested Henry Kracke in the enterprise and these two men interested Louis Rathje, who a number of years prior thereto had resided in the vicinity of Crete. Later, Rathje moved to Chicago where he was quite successful, and was at the time in question president of the Chicago City Bank of Chicago. These men induced others to subscribe for stock, as a result of which the bank was organized with a capital stock of $25,000, represented by 250 shares of the par value of $100 each. At the first meeting of the stockholders, a surplus of $2,500 was provided by levying a ten per cent assessment against the stock. This surplus was apparently increased from time to time out of the undivided profits account until it amounted to $18,000.

There were twenty-three ..original stockholders. The by-laws of the bank provided for nine directors. The statute requires a director to be the owner of at least ten shares of unincumbered stock. There were only twelve stockholders owning ten or more shares, consequently, all but three of them were elected directors. ' There were few changes in the personnel of the board of directors from the date of its organization. Two qf them died while the hank was solvent. The remaining seven were directors at all times except that William H. Meier was not a director from January, 1912, to. January, 1916, and Henry E, Meier was not a director in the year 1911.

Gus Kracke, then an employee in Bathje’s Chicago bank and a son of the Crete bank’s largest stockholder, was elected cashier. It is claimed that his selection was due to the influence of Louis Bathje. Whether or not this contention is correct is, in our opinion, of no moment, for the evidence indisputably shows that 'his habits were exemplary, his reputation, for honesty and integrity was of the very best; he had sufficient education and experience to transact the business for which he was employed; his history and family connections were well known to the people of Crete; he was a devout member of the German Lutheran Church; he was at all times industrious and exceedingly frugal; his personal and family expenses were kept within his means and his home life was pure and simple. His selection appeared to be proper and well deserved. In addition to being cashier of the bank at the time of its failure, he was the village postmaster.

As would naturally be supposed, the biisiness of the bank was not great. Its deposits seldom jsxceeded $150,000. It generally required the' services ofTIb one else than the cashier to attend to the business. Kracke possessed the absolute confidence of the directors and stockholders. When he was sick or absent .from the bank on any cause, which was indeed seldom, the president of the bank, Henry E. Meier, performed the duties of the cashier. The good reputation of the cashier remained unblemished and untarnished until November 19, 1919,.,when_the..bank was closed by the Auditor of Public Accounts.

Just when the dishonest practices of Gus Kracke began is not entirely clear to us. The chancellor found that the bank was solvent December 17, 1914; and this date was used by the chancellor in his determination of the liability of the several directors and we see no reason to change the date for such purpose. However, it is quite evident that the cashier was fraudulently manipulating the books and accounts of .the bank considerably prior to that time.

Among the men in business in Crete was one William Seggebruch, a nephew of two of the directors. He was a saloon keeper and a real estate agent. He conducted a grain office where he bought and sold the grain of the farmers. He dealt in automobiles and built and owned a large garage. He was decidedly the active business man of the village. He did his banking business at the Crete bank. In 1911 his checking account was overdrawn. Often his overdraft was of considerable size, indeed so large that it frightened the cashier, who, in order to conceal the condition of the account from examination, began tampering with the books. By means of a system of bookkeeping employed' by the cashier, William Seggebruch’s overdraft was made to appear as a balance to his credit. At one time Gfus Kracke went to his father and told him of the situation in reference to the overdraft and obtained from his father $20,000 which he applied on the shortage. Nevertheless he continued to permit Seggebruch to use the money of the bank and, at the time the bank closed, the overdraft of the Crete Garage, one of Seggebruch’s enterprises, together with his other overdrafts, was approximately $100,000.

Seggebruch had been speculating in grain on the Chicago Board of Trade. In 1915, his accounts at the bank were so largely overdrawn that both he and the cashier knew that his overdrafts had imperiled the bank. The situation was desperate and they employed desperate means to meet it. The plan adopted to take care of the shortage was for Kracke, to continue to funnish moneys, of the bank for further grain_speculations and thereafter he should have anjntere.st in the profits arising from the deals. In order to conceal his interest in the grain transactions, the business was carried on both at the bank and in the brokers ’ offices in Chicago in the name of “Seggebruch & Company.” There was no broker’s office in Crete. Seggebruch was the active man of the firm. He placed the orders and received the statements of account from the brokers. Bemittances were made in the name of Seggebruch & Company. Kracke’s identity was nowhere revealed. The results of their operations on the Board of Trade were disastrous and the losses were added to instead of diminished. The bank became insolvent.

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Related

Ohlendorf v. Bennett
241 Ill. App. 537 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1926)

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Bluebook (online)
230 Ill. App. 427, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohlendorf-v-rathje-illappct-1923.